Teledyne Refrigerated Sampler 6712FR User Manual

Page 211

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6712FR Refrigerated Sampler

Appendix C General Safety Procedures

C-5

The lowest oxygen concentrations that I have observed in a
sewer atmosphere was 13 percent. It was in a sealed chamber,
near sea level, upstream from an inverted siphon on a metro-
politan trunk. A man would be foolish to enter the chamber.
Without ventilation, he might die, but not from lack of oxygen.

It seems unlikely that anyone has ever died in a sewer from suf-
focation, that is, a lack of oxygen. Deaths have often been
attributed to ‘asphyxiation.’ This is a word which, according to
the dictionary, is used to mean death from an atmosphere that
does not support life. The word has sometimes been misinter-
preted as meaning suffocation, which is only one kind of asphyxi-
ation.

In nearly all cases of death in sewers, the real killer is hydrogen
sulfide. It is important that this fact be recognized. Many cities
diligently test for explosive gases, which is very important, and
they may measure the oxygen concentration which usually is
unimportant, but they rarely measure H

2

S. Death has occurred

where it is unlikely that there was any measurable reduction in
the oxygen concentration. Waste water containing 2 mg per liter
of dissolved sulfide, and at a pH of 7.0, can produce, in a chamber
with high turbulence, a concentration of 300 PPM H

2

S, in the air.

This is considered to be a lethal concentration. Many people have
died from H

2

S, not only in sewers and industries, but also from

swamps and from hot springs. In one resort area, at least five
persons died from H

2

S poisoning before the people were ready to

admit that H

2

S is not a therapeutic agent. Hardly a year passes

in the U.S. without a sewer fatality from H

2

S as well as deaths

elsewhere in the world.

The presence of H

2

S in a sewer atmosphere is easily determined.

A bellows-and-ampoule type of tester is very satisfactory for the
purpose, even though it is only crudely quantitative. When using
a tester of this type, do not bring the air to the ampoule by way of
a tube, as this may change the H

2

S concentration. Hang the

ampoule in the air to be tested, with a suction tube to the bulb or
bellows.

Lead acetate paper is very useful as a qualitative indicator. It
cannot be used to estimate the amount of sulfide, but it will
quickly turn black in an atmosphere containing only a tenth of a
lethal concentration.

Electrodes or other similar electrical indicating devices for H

2

S

in air have been marketed. Some of them are known to be unre-
liable, and we know of none that have proved dependable. Do not
use one unless you check it at frequent intervals against air con-
taining known H

2

S concentrations. A supposed safety device that

is unreliable is worse than none at all.

Remember that the nose fails, too, when it comes to sensing dan-
gerous concentrations of H

2

S.

Various other toxic gases have been mentioned in some publica-
tions. It is unlikely that any person has been asphyxiated in a
sewer by any of those other gases, except possibly chlorine. The
vapor of gasoline and other hydrocarbons is sometimes present in

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